Two hundred years from now we will have decided that computers aren’t interesting, that they are really boring, and we will move on to something else. It will just be a technology in the background like refrigeration technology now.
This quote by Guy Steele comes from the panel discussion at the end of Don Knuth’s Things a Computer Scientist Rarely Talks About.
Manuela Veloso is an AI and robotics researcher at Carnegie Mellon University who did a lot of work with soccer-playing robots.
I often see people who look at my soccer-playing Sony dog robots being literally moved by those little machines. When I am giving a big technical explanation, saying that the robot is a mechanical thing in which you can switch the legs, press a button, and put another leg on, I see this panic in the eyes of my audience like, “You are hurting the dog!” I say, “I’m sorry, this is a robot.”
This excerpt comes from the panel discussion at the end of Don Knuth’s Things a Computer Scientist Rarely Talks About.
As I was designing a chip for a very simple RISC computer, I was surprised to find that the easiest and somehow the best way to design this chip was to have it doing all kinds of things that would never be needed afterwards. I mean, two binary numbers were input to the chip at each clock cycle, and the adder would add them and the subtracter would simultaneously subtract them, and the multiplier would multiply them. These things were all going on at once inside the chip, but only one of those results would survive and actually be used in the computation in the next step. In this way the chips were operating quite differently from the computer programs I had been writing before.
The alternative would have been to design the chip so that every circuit inside the multiplier had extra inhibitors on it saying, don’t multiply unless I tell you to.” That would add an awful lot to the hardware.
I started thinking about this as an interesting metaphor for society and the world in general. It might help us to reformulate our notions of “purpose.” There is a good reason for a thousand people to work on a problem even though only one of them is going to solve it, and even though the people know in advance that only one of them is going to influence the final answer. Everybody can take pride in what they do even if it doesn’t show up in the next generation, because otherwise less would get done and people would be idle.
You might find it interesting to muse about that a little bit.
From Don Knuth’s book, Things a Computer Scientist Rarely Talks About, in which the distinguished computer scientist discusses religion and spirituality.